There seems to be a progression one goes through after every purchase of a computer-connected camera.
From coffee pots to the child care area at Cisco, thousands of USB- and Firewire-connected cameras are pointing at areas of varying interest.
I have hit this spot before, sometime in the late 90s, when the Linux QuickCam drivers became solid and I actually had a view. After a couple moves, the idea was no longer worth the effort, and I didn't bother. Of course, I later had an iSight sitting around, but I didn't use it for much other than video capture to snag some shots of a lightning storm.
The place we moved to in December has an OK view of downtown San Francisco, the Bay Bridge, and a big chunk of I-80, among other things. My office occupies part of the second floor, with a window that has a peek-a-boo view over our lower deck and over to tall buildings with lights. No Transamerica Building unless I hid my older Powerbook in the corner of the bedroom, but that's for stage #4 below.
I was looking for simple software that would capture a single frame from my iSight and upload it to my webserver. I could call it the "random buildings and weather in San Francisco webcam," but basically, I had a useless iSight sitting on my desk, calling for me to make its life meaningful again.
At one point this would have involved a lot of scripting and pain, taking the better part of the day. Now that I'm a Mac person, and Mac users are Shiny Happy People, there is a load of software for uploading still pictures, streaming movies, podcasts, and vidcasts. (I want the trademark for this, so I can suppress it forever.)
I went looking for the "leader" in the field, based on most glowing reviews, lists of competitors, etc., and EvoCam seemed to be providing people with a lot of love. I downloaded it, and it seemed ideal. I could set a timer, and every 10 minutes, not only would it take a snapshot and upload it to my website, it would also make a thumbnail and upload that as well. This was very close to precisely what I wanted -- a tiny picture in the right hand navbar, and a full-sized picture in case someone actually cared enough to click on it. After all, a 160x120ish picture, unless it's reeses-crotch-cam.com, isn't going to tell anyone much.
There were some problems with EvoCam from the beginning, though, so I never bothered registering the software. I'll register just about anything, but this software really doesn't meet the needs of anyone hoping to take pictures using their iSight under low-light conditions. Had I been testing this out at noon, I probably would have bought it, but since I was trying it right at sunset, EvoCam didn't make the cut. See, it's made to be used with lots of cameras, local or remote, and as apps of this type often do, it fell into that valley of "greatest common denominator". As soon as it got dark out, the iSight couldn't see anything, and there was no way to adjust it. I looked through the support forum, and it appeared that EvoCam was a brittle piece of software anyway, often crashing after a week of use.
Next, I tried my old buddy, Quicktime Broadcaster, to see if it had any still-image-capture support, but it's almost strictly a streaming-video package, and there's no way I'm streaming Kat's and my fights to the Intardweeb-at-large. Mil Millington already has a corner on that sort of thing.
What I finally ended up buying was ImageCaster, a $30 applet that does, more or less, precisely what I want. I can create multiple items that have different timers, different sources, different upload destinations, and all the same sort of features that EvoCam had, while actually letting the iSight's auto-adjust functionality work correctly.
So, now, you can see what the weather looks like over Market Street in San Francisco, all thanks to my diligent efforts.
Before I forget, I should round out the list to relieve the suspense.
p.s., I love that I got you to click on a stileproject link at work. I wonder how fast you closed that window.